Welcome to the Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities

Our website offers you many opportunities to stay informed, connect with our network of friends and join our journey toward developing Real Communities.

Launched in 2010, the Real Communities Initiative is our award-winning signature concept that is receiving national attention for its innovation and diversity. Now called Real Communities Partnerships, they provide cutting edge, intentionally inclusive activities throughout the State with a focus on projects that create opportunities for all people – with and without disabilities – to work together as full partners in the social life and civic development of their communities.

We support grassroots efforts and community activities to promote inclusive neighborhoods throughout Georgia, where each person has the opportunity to contribute and experience Real Homes, Real Careers, Real Learning, Real Influence and Real Supports. At GCDD.org you'll find the latest on legislative updates and disability news, information on advocacy, and stay on top of trending topics and critical issues from the broader disability community via our online publications, Blog, photos, videos, tweets and Facebook posts.

We invite you to learn with us as we engage in the work of Real Communities to offer Georgians a sustainable model of community-centered individual and family support. We look forward to a robust dialogue about applying the principles of Real Communities wherever you go: using person-centered supports, community-centered connections and persistent and reflective learning. We hope you'll journey with us, purposefully involving people with and without intellectual and developmental disabilities in collaborative projects in your communities.

Our efforts are guided by a Five Year Strategic Plan focusing on:

• Researching, analyzing and changing public policy;
• Promoting advocacy on behalf of the developmental disabilities community;
• Creating awareness around relevant issues;
• Funding and implementing programs;
• Adopting best practices that enhance our ability to deliver better results.

While GCDD – a federally funded, independent state agency - does not provide direct services, we often act as a convener for agencies, organizations, individuals, family members and supporters to develop coordinated public policy. Through policy initiatives, public awareness, advocacy programs and community building, GCDD works to bring about social change for individuals and families living with intellectual and developmental disabilities in Georgia.

Project SEARCH in Georgia

Project SEARCH LogoAt the Annual Project SEARCH Conference held in Orlando, FL in August, 183 program sites from 37 states and three countries were recognized for achieving 70-100% employment for their 2015 program graduates. Georgia was an Outcome Award Honoree winning 13 awards, including nine out of 18 sites that were recognized as 100% placement sites. What is it about Georgia sites that garnered such recognition?

“One of the things we did was to host a two-day training on job development for the sites, with an emphasis on helping to make sure they had good strategies for finding jobs for people,” shared Dottie Adams, statewide coordinator for Project SEARCH Georgia.

Adams has been with Project SEARCH Georgia since it was established as a statewide initiative nine years ago. Project SEARCH was originally developed at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in 1996, when Erin Riehle, director of Cincinnati Children’s Emergency Department, and Susie Rutkowski, then the special education director at Great Oaks Career Campuses, partnered to launch the initiative to commit to hiring individuals with developmental disabilities in the workplace.

Project SEARCH is unique in that it is a business-led, high school-to-work transition program, serving students with significant intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD). It takes place entirely at the workplace and the goal for each student participant is competitive employment. This means employment in an integrated setting, working alongside coworkers with and without disabilities, year-round work that is not seasonal employment, 16 hours/week or more and minimum wage or higher.

The success of the nine Georgia sites in securing such employment for their interns resulted in their recognition as 100% placement sites. Adams credits the teamwork displayed by the different parties and the involvement of businesses in the community as the contributing factors to this success. Businesses aren’t expected to hire the interns they train, but if they do find a student to be a good match, they can be easily hired as they are already trained for the role, thus saving the business training fees.

Another benefit observed is some of the entry-level jobs see frequent turnover and are hard to keep filled, but interns from Project SEARCH want to work and are willing to do the job. “Our students are motivated because for the first time, they are making money,” explains Adams. “The emphasis is on employment and making sure the students don’t just go to training for a year for nothing. We have employment rates of about 75% with people working an average of 25 hours, making an average of $9.61 which is pretty good!”

The majority of the Project SEARCH sites in Georgia are all medical centers or hospitals but one of its newest members is a credit card service company located in Columbus, GA. Total System Services, commonly referred to as TSYS, provides payment processing, merchant and related payment services to financial and nonfinancial institutions globally.

TSYS Business Liaison Pino Davis said, “There was an unmet need in our community for students in the Muscogee County School District (MCSD) with intellectual disabilities who were aging out of the school system.”
At the same time, MCSD Transition Manager Paula Dukes was relentless in her search for a business to partner with Project SEARCH. Although initially faced with “no, not right now,” her passion for helping students led her to the new TSYS Senior Executive Vice President & Chief Information Officer Patty Watson, who has a child with a disability.

“Patty was familiar with Project SEARCH from her previous employer. Her past experience coupled with her personal experience changed our answer to an emphatic ‘yes’!” said Davis.

This proved an opportunity for 18-year-old high school graduate Zariah Wheeler from Columbus to intern with TSYS through Project SEARCH. During her training, she learned to work the printer, make copies, identify different file and folder sizes and use a label maker – all skills that she can put to use in her new place of work once hired. “Everyone is helpful and I am enjoying this experience. I will be here for 10 weeks and get a job after that,” she said confidently.

TSYS’ partnership with Project SEARCH is proof that everyone can work despite disabilities or personal challenges. TSYS team members have welcomed the Project SEARCH interns, many volunteering to serve as mentors. Another benefit of having the interns is how they are changing the way new team members are trained. TSYS has incorporated more visual aids and tasks are broken down into steps. Once more established, TSYS plans to share their successes with other local employers, such as insurance giant Aflac, and to encourage others to participate in the program.

Many other sites are already experiencing the value of partnering with Project SEARCH and flourishing as 100% employment sites. Among them is Cornerstone Medical Center (previously Hutcheson Medical Center) in Ft. Oglethorpe, GA. Students trained here are employed at Unique Fabrications, ShopRite, Food City and a local daycare. “If not for Project SEARCH, these students would be sitting at home without jobs,” says Beth Hammerstone, Project SEARCH instructor.

One of the success stories is that of 23-year-old Chickamauga, GA resident Rachel Cannon who works at the Walmart in Lafayette, GA as a greeter. “The experience at Project SEARCH was a real eye opener for me because it taught me a lot about what it is like to be out in the workforce and get a paycheck,” said Cannon. “I have been at Walmart almost six months and I love it!”

Project SEARCH Sites in Georgia
•    Albany
•    Atlanta (3)
•    Canton
•    Cartersville
•    Columbus
•    Dalton (3)
•    Douglas
•    Gainesville
•    Moultrie
•    Savannah
•    Springfield
•    Thomasville
•    Walker
•    Waycross

For more information about Project SEARCH, visit www.projectsearch.us